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HELLBOUND Motorcycle Club, Ashland, Ohio; Hell's Henchmen Motorcycle Club, in Illinois and Indiana (patched over in 1994) [93] Hellkats Motorcycle Club [5] Hellside Motorcycle Club; Hooligans MC, in Arizona [94] Horror Merchants MC 1%ers Massachusetts, New Hampshire; Iron Cross Motorcycle Club [5] Kings of Mayhem Motorcycle Club [95] Longriders ...
Currently the largest outlaw motorcycle club in the city of Detroit. [79] Homietos Motorcycle Club: N/A N/A Active as of 2023 in Oklahoma City, Kansas City, and Texas. Rival gang of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club. Iron Horsemen: 1960s Cincinnati, US A major 1%er club in the United States.
The Devils Diciples are considered by law enforcement to be among the many second-tier, after the "Big Four", outlaw motorcycle clubs.[2]Ronald Douglas Neal, the president of the Birmingham, Alabama Devils Diciples chapter, and Jacquelyn O'Dusky, a Diciples associate, were indicted on firearms and narcotics charges after the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and the ...
The Red Devils Motorcycle Club (RDMC) is an international 1% outlaw motorcycle club and the principal support club of the Hells Angels. [2] The club is not to be confused with the now-defunct Original Red Devils Motorcycle Club that was founded in Canada in the late 1940s. This club patched over to the East Coast based Bacchus in 2015.
Michael Vincent O'Farrell (June 2, 1949 – June 6, 1989), nicknamed "Irish", was an American outlaw biker and gangster who served as the vice-president and acting president of the Oakland, California, chapter of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club (HAMC).
Motorcycle club members meet at a run in Australia in 2009. An outlaw motorcycle club is a motorcycle subculture. It is generally centered on the use of cruiser motorcycles, particularly Harley-Davidsons and choppers, and a set of ideals that purport to celebrate freedom, nonconformity to mainstream culture, and loyalty to the biker group.
The Hessians Motorcycle Club was founded on March 7, 1968, in Costa Mesa, California by Thomas F. Maniscalco, [5] a motorcycle enthusiast who would later become an attorney and convicted murderer. [1] [6] The club would soon expand across the nation's western seaboard and in 1972, they claimed to have around 500 members across the United States ...
Originally known as Los Diablos Motorcycle Club, the club was founded in San Bernardino, California in 1961 by John J. "Cadillac Jack" Baltas, a native of Meriden, Connecticut. [1] Baltas, who served as the club's national president and was once a candidate for Meriden city council, and died in Leominster, Massachusetts on April 22, 2012, aged 70.